cmrdata
Structural
- Oct 19, 2010
- 70
In GSA “Alternate Path Analysis and Design Guidelines for Progressive Collapse Resistance”, 2016 edition, the “Redundancy Requirements” is prescribed.
This requirement is different from the “Enhanced Local Resistance” (ELR), as stipulated in UFC 4-023-03 documents, which makes sense intuitively.
Commentary C3.4 in the GSA documents explain that the rationale of the Redundancy Requirements is “…. to provide robust structures that provide some level of redundancy ….”, and it further stated that “Structural designs where progressive collapse resistance is localized to one floor level such as single ring girder or truss system do not meet this objective ….”
What I don’t understand is that, when we perform the alternate path method design with column removal at specific locations and stories, the analysis (e.g. using SAP 2000 staged construction methodology as demonstrated in the example in both GSA and UFC documents) is executed in a 3D fashion and all affected beams by the removal of one particular column, plan-wise and height-wise, are analyzed and designed to pick up the resulting loadings. It seems to me that the GSA Redundancy Requirements simply re-check the strengths and stiffness of these same beams that have been beefed up because of the loss of column. I therefore do not understand where does the “redundancy” come from? I also don’t understand the rationale behind the 30% rule as prescribed in eq. 3-14 and 3-17.
Any thoughts anyone may have on this one will be appreciated. Thanks.
This requirement is different from the “Enhanced Local Resistance” (ELR), as stipulated in UFC 4-023-03 documents, which makes sense intuitively.
Commentary C3.4 in the GSA documents explain that the rationale of the Redundancy Requirements is “…. to provide robust structures that provide some level of redundancy ….”, and it further stated that “Structural designs where progressive collapse resistance is localized to one floor level such as single ring girder or truss system do not meet this objective ….”
What I don’t understand is that, when we perform the alternate path method design with column removal at specific locations and stories, the analysis (e.g. using SAP 2000 staged construction methodology as demonstrated in the example in both GSA and UFC documents) is executed in a 3D fashion and all affected beams by the removal of one particular column, plan-wise and height-wise, are analyzed and designed to pick up the resulting loadings. It seems to me that the GSA Redundancy Requirements simply re-check the strengths and stiffness of these same beams that have been beefed up because of the loss of column. I therefore do not understand where does the “redundancy” come from? I also don’t understand the rationale behind the 30% rule as prescribed in eq. 3-14 and 3-17.
Any thoughts anyone may have on this one will be appreciated. Thanks.